The International Affective Picture System (IAPS) has been widely used in aging-oriented research on emotion. However, no ratings for older adults are available. The aim of the present study was to close this gap by providing ratings of valence and arousal for 504 IAPS pictures by 53 young and 53 older adults. Both age groups rated positive pictures as less arousing, resulting in a stronger linear association between valence and arousal, than has been found in previous studies. This association was even stronger in older than in young adults. Older adults perceived negative pictures as more negative and more arousing and positive pictures as more positive and less arousing than young adults did. This might indicate a dedifferentiation of em...
Age differences were examined in affective processing, in the context of a visual search task. Young...
The present study investigated differences between healthy younger, middle-aged, and older adults in...
Two studies examined age differences in recall and recognition memory for positive, negative, and ne...
Abstract Earlier views on emotional processing and ageing characterised older age as a period of red...
We compared emotional reactivity to affective pictures for 32 older (60–71 years) and 34 younger (18...
The latter part of the lifespan is commonly associated with a decline of cognitive functions, but al...
International audienceResearch on emotion suggests that the attentional preference observed toward t...
This study was designed to investigate the evolution of emotional processing over the whole adult li...
In contrast to effortful cognitive functions, emotional functioning may remain stable or even be enh...
Age differences were examined in affective processing, in the context of a visual search task. Young...
International audienceResearch on emotion showed an increase, with age, in prevalence of positive in...
Despite the central role that emotional reactivity plays in adaptation, few studies have examined ag...
Despite its assumed importance for emotional well-being, studies investigating the positivity effect...
Research on emotion showed an increase, with age, in prevalence of positive information relative to ...
The results of the present study show that the effect of emotion on recollection is modulated by age...
Age differences were examined in affective processing, in the context of a visual search task. Young...
The present study investigated differences between healthy younger, middle-aged, and older adults in...
Two studies examined age differences in recall and recognition memory for positive, negative, and ne...
Abstract Earlier views on emotional processing and ageing characterised older age as a period of red...
We compared emotional reactivity to affective pictures for 32 older (60–71 years) and 34 younger (18...
The latter part of the lifespan is commonly associated with a decline of cognitive functions, but al...
International audienceResearch on emotion suggests that the attentional preference observed toward t...
This study was designed to investigate the evolution of emotional processing over the whole adult li...
In contrast to effortful cognitive functions, emotional functioning may remain stable or even be enh...
Age differences were examined in affective processing, in the context of a visual search task. Young...
International audienceResearch on emotion showed an increase, with age, in prevalence of positive in...
Despite the central role that emotional reactivity plays in adaptation, few studies have examined ag...
Despite its assumed importance for emotional well-being, studies investigating the positivity effect...
Research on emotion showed an increase, with age, in prevalence of positive information relative to ...
The results of the present study show that the effect of emotion on recollection is modulated by age...
Age differences were examined in affective processing, in the context of a visual search task. Young...
The present study investigated differences between healthy younger, middle-aged, and older adults in...
Two studies examined age differences in recall and recognition memory for positive, negative, and ne...